Responsibility for Conduct Sample Clauses
The Responsibility for Conduct clause establishes which party is accountable for the actions and behavior of individuals or entities involved in performing under the agreement. Typically, this clause clarifies that each party is responsible for ensuring that its employees, agents, or subcontractors comply with the contract’s terms and applicable laws while carrying out their duties. By clearly assigning responsibility, the clause helps prevent disputes over misconduct or non-compliance, ensuring that any breaches or issues can be directly attributed and addressed.
Responsibility for Conduct. The College reserves the right to impose reasonable conditions upon the applicant to assure compliance with these regulations. The applicant, in addition to the above, must agree:
Responsibility for Conduct. As between the Participant and the NDHIN, the NDHIN is solely responsible for all acts and omissions of the NDHIN with respect to the Hosted System, the Hosted Applications, including any confidential or other information accessed in connection with the NDHIN, and all such acts and omissions, including the acts or omissions of its Administrative Users, shall be considered to be the acts and omissions of the NDHIN. In addition, as between the Participant and the NDHIN, the NDHIN shall be solely responsible for all acts or omissions of any other individual who accesses the Hosted System or uses the Hosted Applications either through the NDHIN or by use of any password, identifier or log-on received or obtained from the NDHIN if the access or use was due to the negligent or intentional failure of the NDHIN to comply with its obligations under this Agreement.
Responsibility for Conduct. Each Party shall be responsible for the consequences of its own actions or inaction, willful misconduct, gross negligence, and/or breach of fiduciary obligation in connection with this Agreement, and in connection with any work undertaken in accordance with this Agreement.
Responsibility for Conduct. As between the Participant and the RHIO, the RHIO shall be solely responsible for all acts and omissions of the RHIO with respect to the RHIO System, the RHIO Services and/or any confidential and/or other information accessed in connection therewith, and all such acts and omissions shall be deemed to be the acts and omissions of the RHIO. In addition, as between the Participant and the RHIO, the RHIO shall be solely responsible for all acts or omissions of any other individual who accesses the RHIO System and/or uses the RHIO Services either through the RHIO or by use of any password, identifier or log-on received or obtained from the RHIO if access and/or use was due to the negligent or intentional failure of the RHIO to comply with its obligations under this Agreement.
Responsibility for Conduct. I accept and assume responsibility for injuries and damages caused to myself and others arising from my own conduct while participating in the Program. I understand that VBT accepts and assumes responsibility for its own negligent or reckless conduct, but that with respect to the COVID19 pandemic VBT only accepts and assumes responsibility for its gross negligence or reckless conduct, not negligence. Also, I agree VBT is not responsible for the conduct of third parties, such as providers of transportation, food, beverage or lodging. I release VBT from liabilities not expressly assumed in this paragraph. Fitness to participate. VBT recommends that I consult with a physician before participating in the Program. It is my own responsibility to determine whether the Program is suitable for me. VBT also strongly recommends I verify that my medical insurance will be honored in the countries in which I will travel for the Program.
Responsibility for Conduct. User takes responsibility for all activities that occur under its GALA App and for its use of the GALA Services, and User accepts all risks of any authorized or unauthorized access to its GALA App, to the maximum extent permitted by law. User represents and warrants that the User is familiar with and accepts the risks associated with digital Apps and private keys, including the risks described herein. User is solely responsible for its own conduct while accessing or using the GALA Services or GALA App, and for any consequences thereof. User agrees to use the GALA Services, GALA App, and GALA Blockchain for purposes that are legal, proper and in accordance with these Terms and any applicable laws or regulations. By way of example, and not as a limitation, User may not, and may not allow any third party to: (i) send, upload, distribute or disseminate any unlawful, defamatory, harassing, abusive, fraudulent, obscene, or otherwise objectionable content; (ii) distribute viruses, worms, defects, Trojan horses, corrupted files, hoaxes, or any other items of a destructive or deceptive nature; (iii) impersonate another person (via the use of an email address or otherwise); (iv) upload, post, transmit or otherwise make available through the GALA Services any content that infringes the intellectual proprietary rights of any party; (v) use the GALA Services to violate the legal rights (such as rights of privacy and publicity) of others; (vi) engage in, promote, or encourage illegal activity (including, without limitation, money laundering); (vii) interfere with other users’ enjoyment of the GALA App or GALA Blockchain; (viii) exploit the GALA Services for any unauthorized commercial purpose; (ix) modify, adapt, translate, or reverse engineer any portion of the GALA Services; (x) remove any copyright, trademark or other proprietary rights notices contained in or on the GALA App or GALA Blockchain or any part of it; (xi) reformat or frame any portion of the GALA App; (xii) display any content on the GALA App or GALA Blockchain that contains any hate-related or violent content or contains any other material, products or services that violate or encourage conduct that would violate any criminal laws, any other applicable laws, or any third party rights; (xiii) use any robot, spider, site search/retrieval application, or other device to retrieve or index any portion of the GALA App or the content posted on the GALA App, or to collect information about its users for any una...
Responsibility for Conduct. The TRAVELER accepts and assumes responsibility for his/hers own negligent or reckless conduct while pariticipating in the Program.
Responsibility for Conduct. Each party agrees that it will be responsible for the negligent acts or omissions of its agents and employees causing injury to persons not a party to this MOU. Nothing herein shall be deemed a waiver of any governmental or sovereign immunity available to either party.
Responsibility for Conduct attribution As the ICJ has noted, “the fundamental principle governing the law of inter- national responsibility [is that] a State is responsible only for its own con- duct”.8 States are, however, legal fictions that cannot act in and of themselves given that they are exactly that: fictions. Since states are legal entities, not natural persons, one inevitably needs to apply one or more rules of attribution in order to determine which acts (or omissions) can be regarded as acts (or omissions) of a certain state. Indeed, to say that state X committed act Y (or omitted to do so) requires one to either explicitly or implicitly argue that person (or group of persons) Z, who factually acted or omitted, did so on behalf of state X. Such explicit or implicit arguments in turn need to be based on a rule of attribution, i.e. a maxim providing under which preconditions conduct Y of person(s) Z can be regarded as attributable to state X. Only when such a required link is established, one can legitimately claim that the conduct in question is actually the conduct of state X and that state X can rightfully be held responsible for it. Attribution hence provides a state’s ownership over and responsibility for certain conduct (or omissions) as exercised through what can legitimately be called its intermediaries or subsidiaries. It would in turn be little helpful if every state maintained its own maxim of attribution – this would create great disparities and would leave the state with tremendous discretion to determine which acts can, and which cannot, 7 As will be further outlined in chapter 7, the precise tests for establishing jurisdiction differ amongst human rights regimes. 8 ICJ, Case Concerning the Application of the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide (Bosnia and Herzegovina v. Serbia and Montenegro), 26 February 2007, ICJ Reports 2007, 43, para 406. See also Hallo ▇▇ ▇▇▇▇, 2011, p. 201. be regarded as its own. Initiatives on the international level have henceforth attempted to provide a basic set of attribution rules relevant not only to the field of human rights law but to all domains of public international law. Rules of attribution are as such regarded as rules of secondary international law, applying to all situations where primary rules of international law – including international human rights law – provide for certain obligations.9 Such ini- tiatives have, however, not remained void of debate and controversy: various rules o...
Responsibility for Conduct. User shall maintain order throughout the use period and shall not engage in or allow others to engage in any event or conduct in the Public Meeting Room or on its premises which may cause harm, injury or damage to persons or property.